Georgia State Capitol - Atlanta, GA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Lat34North
N 33° 44.943 W 084° 23.288
16S E 741939 N 3737396
The Georgia Capitol building was constructed between 1884 and 1889. It is built in the neoclassical structure with a gilded dome.
Waymark Code: WM206C
Location: Georgia, United States
Date Posted: 08/13/2007
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member tiki-4
Views: 177

The Georgia Capitol building was constructed between 1884 and 1889. It is built in the neoclassical structure with a gilded dome and is the perfect expression and symbol for the capitol of the ‘New South’ as Atlanta considered itself to be after the Reconstruction. The dome is gilded with Gold that was mined in north Georgia. The State Capitol is listed on the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places.

The grounds around the Capitol have many statues of the leaders of Georgia that played a significant role in the states history. There is also a museum inside the Capitol.

The Gilding of Georgia Capitols’ Dome

During a 1957 renovation of Georgia's capitol, Thomas Bradbury, the architect in charge of the project, and Gordon Price, a Dahlonega-born engineer living in Atlanta, proposed that the deteriorated tin-covered dome be replaced by a more attractive and durable surface. The citizens of Dahlonega and Lumpkin County offered to donate the gold. Within a week, twenty ounces of gold had been pledged by citizens from an area that 129 years earlier had been the site of the nation's first gold rush.

The gold was expected to last thirty or forty years but the gold was applied during the winter months, and the engineers were unaware that gold leaf does not bond properly when it is applied during cold weather. By 1977 almost half of the gold was gone from the dome. Concern over the disappearing gold and the dome's appearance led a number of Georgians and state officials to explore how the dome might be regilded. The Dahlonega–Lumpkin County Jaycees committed their organization to raising the gold for the project, as they had done in the late 1950s, with overall responsibility for regilding to be assumed by the Georgia Building Authority.

The fund-raising effort was ambitious; a wagon train crossed the state, visiting each of the state's former capitals. In June 1979, after a journey of almost six weeks, the wagon train pulled up to the city limits of Dahlonega, where Governor George Busbee boarded the lead wagon and drove it for the final few miles. Before the end of the year, enough gold for the dome had been collected.

Only ten other states have capitol domes covered with gold leaf: Colorado, Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wyoming. Of these, the gilded domes of Iowa and Georgia are the largest.

Source: Georgia State Capitol (visit link)


The Georgia State Capitol is open to the public 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and is closed on weekends and holidays. Guided tours are available Monday through Friday at 10:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m., and 2:00 p.m. The Georgia General Assembly is in session beginning the second Monday in January and continues for 40 working days.

The Capitol is located in downtown Atlanta at the intersection of I-20 and I-75/85, near Underground Atlanta and the Five Points and Georgia State MARTA station.



Type of Capitol: State, Province, Canton, or Other Primary Division of a Nation

Address:
State Capitol
Atlanta, GA USA
30334


Dates of Construction: Between 1884 and 1889

Hours: 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday

Capitol Web Site: [Web Link]

Historical Monuments/Memorials:
Statues honoring Jimmy Carter – Governor, 39th president of the United States Herman E. Talmadge - Governor and United States Senator Joseph E. Brown - Governor John B. Gordon – General and U.S. Senator Richard B. Russell, Jr - Governor and United States Senator Memorial to those that served in the Spanish American War. Georgia Historical Marker 060-2 - Historic Ground Atlanta's first City Hall stood here 1853-1883. Used jointly by Fulton county courts. During Atlanta's occupation - Sept. to Nov. 1864 - the 2nd Mass. Regiment, constituting the Provost Guard of Sherman's army, camped in a park on this site. From here, Sept. 6, 1864, went notice to the civilian population of Atlanta to assembly for registration and evacuation. Present State Capitol begun 1884; completed 1889. Commissioners turned back $118.43 of a $1,000,000 building appropriation.


Major Renovations: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Post one photo of the capitol that includes either a GPSr and/or the waymarker along with the capitol in the picture.

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